Jump to content

smerd

Members
  • Posts

    47
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by smerd

  1. The offer email had a paragraph saying that I hadn't received any fellowships but not to be disappointed because I could apply for a range of tutor programs etc which cover varying amounts of fees from 25-100% depending on number of hours worked.

    Did you apply for the Javits Political Scholarship separately? I've never heard of it... so I assume I'm not in the running.

    The Javits Fellowship was separate $2.5k - $5k fellowship application due on the same day as the GSPP app. It required a short form and essay. I found out about it at the last minute and just kinda threw mine together and tossed it in the mail, because why not? Here's the app.

    Separate question: has any american student at all been admitted by email or snail mail yet? On the results page, I'm seeing a lot of dinged americans and dinged/accepted/waitlisted internationals, but zero admitted american university students. Is it possible they're notifying american admits by snail mail and everybody else (dinged and admitted) by email? I guess that kinda makes sense.... Any lucky american admits want to pipe up and prove my theory wrong?

  2. I don't think we can predict when the MPP decisions are coming out based on the PhD decisions, since the committees are different, but I do think that it'll be soon.

    Yeah, unfortunately I agree. Last year, PhDs found out on about 3/4 and MPPs didn't get their emails until 3/18. Let's hope it's sooner, but who knows.

  3. Damn you IdealThinker! Now I won't be able to get away from my inbox all next week. :)

    Looking over the history of HKS notifications here, it looks like 2010 was ~3/18, 2009 was 3/22, and 2008 was 3/14, 2007 was 3/9 (or 3/13, or near there), and 2006 was 3/15. Yes, I've had some time on my hands. So, there's no precedent for notifications in the first week of March, but a couple things have changed this year, including the earlier app deadline and the elimination of extra essays. Where does that leave us? Hell if I know. The HKS website says they'll notify by March 31, but I don't know if we expect anything more unless one you fine posters has a friend on the adcomm? Care to do some reconnaissance work for the rest of us?

    My friend told me that the emails are coming out next week. She said that her friend told her. Don't know if it's true since I heard it down the grape vine so to speak.

  4. I'd also be surprised if they cross checked. I did a couple fellowship essays that were essentially the same. One of the prompts was specific and the other was broader but well-answered by the essay from the other prompt. My resume was a slightly updated version of what I sent in with my app. If I could offer one piece of solid advice to others, I'd recommend using a lot of awesome fonts like comic sans and wing dings, just to spice things up. (Not like I'm trying to weed out competition or anything...)

  5. Yeah, mine says the same thing. "Processed" just means that they have verified that they have received all of your documents (essays, recommendations, etc). I wouldn't expect a decision for another 4 weeks or so. I'm guessing March 18 or thereabouts, based on previous years. On the plus side, I bet we'll start hearing from other MPP schools (GSPP, Ford, WWS etc) a little bit earlier.

    I can relate to the feeling though--it's nerve-racking! I need to find a good month-long hobby to take my mind off of this!

    Hi guys,

    I have a question for those who have applied to HKS- MPP.

    In my Sparks page, it is written that:

    "Thank you for applying to the MPP program at Harvard Kennedy School. We have processed your application, and your file is now complete. Please note that if admitted to Harvard Kennedy School, you will be required to submit official transcript(s). An official transcript is one that is sent directly to HKS from the issuing institution. "

    What does "processed" mean? Does it mean that the admission committee is done with my application or do they still have way to go?

    Please help me by telling your application status or any information you have...

    I am so excited and I can not help myself thinking about the result all the time.

    Thank you.

  6. From my own neurotic reading and re-reading of the posts here, I've come to the same conclusion. I think someone said "Georgetown = slow" or something to that effect a while back. I might just have to talk to a real live human being at GPPI admissions to get the real story...

    Mine said the week of the 14th as well, and I haven't heard back as of today. From what I've (neurotically) read on last year's forums, they tend to be behind.

  7. You've got great internships and some solid leadership experience, so you might have a real shot. That said, and I know you probably don't want to hear this (I wouldn't have), I strongly recommend against going directly from undergrad into an MPP. Not only will you be a stronger applicants in a year or two (which translates into more funding if not also more acceptances), you'll also get to spend some time in your early 20s exploring the world. These are golden years to try things and mess up--rack up some real-world success, failures, experiences. You really can't lose right now (hmm, unless you go into massive debt or develop some sort of debilitating addiction). Worst case scenario you get a year of experiences that, one way or another, will help you focus your interests in grad school.

    I admit it, I'm biased. As someone who applied and didn't get into my top MPP programs right out of college, I am extremely thankful that I was forced to explore the real world for a few years before returning to school. I'm still going to get an MPP, but I have a much better idea of what I want to get out of the degree and have had opportunities over last couple years that won't come again. I really feel like my friends from college who went directly to grad school (many of them bright, interesting, superstars-to-be like yourself) really missed out on a big opportunity. Real, decades-long life comes after grad school--think hard about having some unstructured experiences before then. Grad school is always there, but this time you have now won't be.

    - Internships are great

    - Find some way to spend your time for the next year. Get a job (not on the hill, in my opinion, you already have that and good luck in this climate considering 2 of your 3 offices are now gone) Go WORK on a campaign....Virginia has state senate and house races this year, for instance.

    - Get relevant/diverse volunteer experience: i.e. the Refugee Assistance Program (perhaps the most exotic/interesting/selfless volunteer opportunity available. But your pockets will always be full of those damn nepalese coins...)

    - Take your GREs again, if you want. I got a 660 four years ago, then I studied my ass off for a week straight, took it again, got a 760. You can do the same, and you probably should.

    - You should have 1 professor letter and 2 professional letters. I.e. Nelson's Chief of Staff and your direct supervisor in the WH.

    - Talk to a member of the HKS faculty (preferably the Admissions Committee) now to get a sense of the candidates who are getting through now. They have leadership experience, they're interested in being congressmen/women, or WH speech writers/journalists, etc. This conversation should shape (very directly) how you craft your resume & personal statement

    But my main question is this: Why the {:content:}amp;%# do you want to go to HKS so quickly? Are you committed to getting an MPP from any institution? If not, HKS will see through you. Also, to put it bluntly, HKS is full of adults who know that they didn't know sh!t when they were 21 so they assume you probably don't either. Given that HKS can offer admission to 300 people per year (aka 3,000 people this decade, or 12,000 people during the remaining lifetime of Professor Larry Summers), they are prone to bet that you'll be just like every other 21 year old they know. In fact, they'll say, 21 year olds with impressive internships usually have rich helicopter parents and that fact would exacerbate the probability that you're just like every other 21 year old they know. I say apply now anyways, but don't count on it. Go be a GS-5 for the State Dept...they have an office in Miami...or invent something and file for a patent, then apply every year until you get in.

    But if you want to go to any MPP school, you'll probably get in everywhere else but HKS and WWS. Just sayin'.

  8. Bottom line, I wouldn't put too much faith in the U.S. News rankings in general, and especially not with rankings for a small subset of graduate programs (rankings that are 3 years old now too). Princeton is one of the top handful of MPP (and MPA) programs. It has a fantastic reputation and it pays for most of its student to attend, which is why it has an acceptance rate somewhere below 10%. Coincidentally, there was a malcolm gladwell article that just came out detailing exactly how arbitrary college rankings are (let alone MPP rankings). http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/02/14/110214fa_fact_gladwell

  9. I haven't heard anything either and I submitted in early Dec...maybe we'll hear this week!!

    Just got the email! It's a preliminary admit letter saying that GPPI will "recommend" my admission to the graduate school and that I'll receive an official admit letter soon. Sounds like the same thing they've done in previous years. Hurray! Check your inbox!!

  10. Yeah it applies to HKS only. Basically I received an email with regards to funding as I am an International Student, and they responded with an email which stated I may be eligible to apply for financial aid (which I applied for), and I also ticked several boxes relating to fellowships. For each fellowship I had to submit my cv and essay. I think you should get in contact with them. You may have not applied for it. Also here's a link: http://www.hks.harva...ated#heading_03 check it out. I thought that every one received the same email

    Yup--I went through the same process for HKS.

  11. Program Applied To(MPA, MPP, IR, etc.): MPP and MPA

    Schools Applied To: Berkeley's Goldman School of Public Policy, HKS, NYU Wagner, Columbia's SIPA

    Schools Admitted To: None yet

    Schools Rejected From: None yet

    Still Waiting: all of the above

    Undergraduate institution: Top ten LAC in Midwest

    Undergraduate GPA: 3.85

    Last 60 hours of Undergraduate GPA (if applicable): 3.85 ?

    Undergraduate Major: English and Spanish literature

    GRE Quantitative Score: 700 (70%)

    GRE Verbal Score: 750 (99%)

    GRE AW Score: 5.5 (94%)

    Years Out of Undergrad (if applicable): 5 by next September

    Years of Work Experience: 5 years by next September (4 years of relevant experience)

    Describe Relevant Work Experience: 1 year as an editorial assistant at a small magazine (unrelated to policy), 1 year teaching English in Spain, 1 year grant writing and 2 years case management working with homeless clients and helping them access food stamps and other benefits (which is what I want to study)

    Strength of SOP (be honest, describe the process, etc): I hope it's strong. I have a clear area of interest and a lot of knowledge about it from the direct service work I do now. I hope to study domestic social welfare policy and end up working for a city human services agency.

    Strength of LOR (be honest, describe the process, etc):

    2 academic references and 1 from my current supervisor. I know the academic ones are strong, but they are from an English and Spanish professor so I'm not sure how useful they will be to the admissions committee. My supervisor's is strong (I saw it) but is kind of brief...I don't think she has much experience writing these types of letters. I worry a little about using 2 academic references when I'm 5 years out of school. However, I'm still in touch with these professors and not really with the teachers I worked with in Spain or other people who might have been options. I noticed that HKS specifically asks for 2 work LOR and 1 academic one for someone with my length of work experience. I'm hoping this doesn't mean I won't be considered.

    My other major worry is my quant background. My quant GRE score is not great, and I only took stats in college. I did do well in that class. I just finished up macroeconomics at a community college (and got an A) and am registered for microeconomics for the spring. I'm hoping showing this initiative will help, but I know this may keep me out. If that happens I can apply again next year with the actual grades from these classes under my belt (and maybe try to take the GRE again or enroll in calculus as well).

    Good luck to everyone!

    Any reason why you didn't apply to the Ford school? Their poverty policy program is great, and I'd think it'd be right up your alley given your interest.

  12. Anyone have any idea of when we should be hearing back from GPPI? Their website says 4-6 weeks after submission of application but I've been waiting for longer than that now. Anyone else in the same boat?

    Yeah, that is weird. I submitted back in November and haven't heard anything. Searching this board/results, it looks like a whole bunch of folks got notified on Feb 3rd of last year. So maybe week after next?

  13. Program Applied To MPP/MPA (depending on the program)

    Schools Applied To: Wilson (MPA), Kennedy (MPP), LBJ (MPA), Ford (MPP), Goldman (MPP), Georgetown (MPP)

    Schools Admitted To:

    Schools Rejected From:

    Still Waiting: All of 'em

    Undergraduate institution: Top 5 lib arts

    Undergraduate GPA: 3.5

    Last 60 hours of Undergraduate GPA (if applicable): 3.65

    Undergraduate Major: PoliSci/Econ

    GRE Quantitative Score: 780

    GRE Verbal Score: 720

    GRE AW Score: 6.0

    Years Out of Undergrad (if applicable): 4

    Years of Work Experience: 4

    Describe Relevant Work Experience: Year of service in my area of policy interest, and now 2.5 years of progressively more substantive policy/legislative work in DC

    Strength of SOP (be honest, describe the process, etc): Hmm, by comparison, how can I tell? I haven't read anybody else's! I worked on it for about 4 months obsessively writing and rewriting, so I think it was decent. I felt good about it by the end, and I tailored it slightly (about 10% change) for each program. But who knows?

    Strength of LOR (be honest, describe the process, etc): Feel very good about 2 of them, and the third could very well be good, but I'm not positive.

    Other: I applied right out of undergrad to a couple of these schools and got rejected from both. In retrospect: thank god. I had little idea what I actually wanted to do, and these few years out of school have been fantastic. I would highly recommend against applying before working in the real world for a little bit. Worst case scenario, you spend a year or two having an adventure before getting back to academia. These are your early 20s--do things, have fun, rack up experiences!

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. See our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use